Whatever is bugging him, Ryan can’t let it go.
“Look, I don’t mean to bitch,” he says, “but I just feel like I did a lot of work for you and Velocity in the dark. You and I go way back, and I get that you’re in a different place in your career, but I don’t know…I think you got what you wanted from me and…”
“What?”
“Forget it.”
“No, please.”
“You could’ve shown your old college roommate a little more respect is all I’m saying.”
“What compound are you talking about?”
He looks at me with thinly veiled contempt. “Fuck you.”
We stand silently on the outskirts as the room grows dense with people.
“So are you two together?” I ask. “You and Daniela?”
“Sort of,” he says.
“What does that mean?”
“We’ve been seeing each other for a little while.”
“You always had a thing for her, didn’t you?”
He just smirks.
Scanning the crowd, I find Daniela. She’s poised and in the moment, surrounded by reporters with notepads flipped open, scribbling furiously as she speaks.
“And how’s it going?” I ask, though I’m not sure I really want the answer. “You and my…and Daniela.”
“Amazing. She’s the woman of my dreams.”
He smiles enigmatically, and for three seconds, I want to murder him.
—
At one in the morning, I’m sitting on a sofa at Daniela’s place, watching as she sees the last of her guests to the door. These past few hours have been a challenge—trying to hold semicoherent conversations with Daniela’s art friends while biding my time to get an actual moment alone with her. Apparently, that moment will continue to elude me: Ryan Holder, the man who’s sleeping with my wife, is still here, and as he collapses into a leather chair across from me, I get the sense that he’s settling in, possibly for the night.
From a heavy rocks glass, I sip the dregs of a single malt, not drunk but good and goddamn buzzed, the alcohol serving as a nice buffer between my psyche and this rabbit hole I’ve fallen down.
This wonderland purporting to be my life.
I wonder if Daniela wants me to leave. If I’m that oblivious, last-remaining guest who doesn’t realize when he’s outstayed his welcome.
She shuts the door and hooks the chain.
Kicking off her heels, she stumbles over to the sofa and crashes down onto the cushions with, “What a night.”
She opens the drawer to the end table beside the couch and pulls out a lighter and a stained-glass pipe.
Daniela quit weed when she became pregnant with Charlie and never took it up again. I watch her take a hit and then offer me the pipe, and because this night can’t get any stranger, why not?
Soon we’re all stoned and sitting in the softly humming silence of the spacious loft whose walls are covered in a vast, eclectic array of art.
Daniela has the blinds swept back from the huge, south-facing window that serves as the backdrop to the living room, the downtown a twinkling spectacle beyond the glass.
Ryan passes the pipe to Daniela, and as she begins to repack the bowl, my old roommate slumps back in the chair and stares at the ceiling. The way he keeps licking the front of his teeth makes me smile, because it was always his weed tic, even from back in our grad-school days.
I look through that window at all the lights and ask, “How well do you two know me?”
That seems to catch their attention.
Daniela sets the pipe on the table and turns on the sofa so she’s facing me, her knees drawn into her chest.
Ryan’s eyes snap open.
He straightens in the chair.
“What do you mean?” Daniela asks.
“Do you trust me?”
She reaches over and touches my hand. Pure electricity. “Of course, honey.”
Ryan says, “Even when you and I have been on the outs, I’ve always respected your decency and integrity.”
Daniela looks concerned. “Everything okay?”
I shouldn’t do this. I really shouldn’t do this.
But I’m going to.
“A hypothetical,” I say. “A man of science, a physics professor, is living here in Chicago. He isn’t wildly successful like he always dreamed, but he’s happy, mostly content, and married”—I look at Daniela, thinking of how Ryan described it back at the gallery—“to the woman of his dreams. They have a son. They have a good life.
“One night, this man goes to a bar to see an old friend, a college buddy who recently won a prestigious award. On the walk back, something happens. He never makes it home. He’s abducted. The events are murky, but when he finally regains his full presence of mind, he’s in a lab in South Chicago, and everything has changed. His house is different. He’s not a professor anymore. He’s no longer married to this woman.”
Daniela asks, “Are you saying he thinks these things have changed, or that they’ve actually changed?”
“I’m saying that from his perspective, this isn’t his world anymore.”
“He has a brain tumor,” Ryan suggests.